Emily Garrison, one of this year's recipients of APT DC's Emerging Professionals Sponsorships, attended the 2018 IPTN Workshop in Frederick, Maryland. The following is her summary of the workshop.

I recently had the opportunity to attend the International Preservation Trades Workshop in Frederick Maryland through the Emerging Professionals Sponsorship Program. The workshop features craftsmen and women as well as other professionals in the preservation industry. The workshop included many demonstrations and hands-on sessions, ranging from how-to presentations of a specific repair/preservation method to presentations on projects and advocacy. As a structural engineer it was a great opportunity to observe the aspects of preservation construction, as I am not on-site as structures are repaired.

I went to one session on the process of a dutchman repair. The mason presenter, from the National Park Service, who apart from detailing the process of dutchman repair, shared some of the repairs he conducted in the national parks. One such example was repairing a monument which was struck by a car. It was illuminating being walked through the process of fitting pieces of stone together to minimize the transition from old to new. Had it not been for the difference in color of the two pieces of the stone from age and weathering, it would have been hard to see the dutchman repairs. After explaining the process for a dutchman repair, he demonstrated varies parts of the process on a spare stone, identified his tools, and gave us the opportunity to experiment. I carved a piece of the stone and eventually got somewhat comfortable using the air chisel, after first carving out a very wavy line of stone.

Perhaps the brick mason keynote speaker, Dr. Gerard Lynch, was the best. On the first day of the workshop I walked by Dr. Lynch’s area as he was setting it up to give a presentation. Later, while heading to another session, I stopped as a large crowd was congregated waiting for the presentation to start. The workshop program didn’t include an explanation of the session, so it was not on my list I intended to attend. Witnessing half the workshop attendees were gathered around Dr. Lynch, I decided to stay. His session was a demonstration of tuck-pointing a masonry wall, interwoven with stories from his decades as a mason. He explained the history of tuck-pointing, and took everyone step by step through the process, explaining both tools and techniques.

Dr. Lynch explaining the process of tuck pointing before beginning the demonstration

Beginning the demonstration by grouting the joints

Tuck pointing the joints

Later, during his keynote address, he stressed the importance of apprenticeships and preservation training, emphasizing that modern training regimes often don’t equip craftsmen and women with the knowledge or skills to repair historic structures, as the materials and techniques can differ significantly from modern practices.

Overall, the workshop was a great opportunity to learn about preservation trades with which I don’t have regular contact. I’m grateful for the opportunity to participate

Rebecca Domingue, one of this year's recipients of APT DC's Emerging Professionals Sponsorships, attended the 2018 APTI Conference in Buffalo, New York. The following is her summary of the conference.

The 2018 Association for Preservation Technology International conference in Buffalo, New York offered a unique educational and cultural experience. The conference officially kicked off with the all-conference keynote on Sunday September 23rd.Set in the Ashbury Hall of Babeville (Figure 1) the conference was off to a great start.

Figure 1: Ashbury Hall served as the location of the Opening Keynote, located in Babeville, a 19th century gothic revival style church structure repurposed into an event space

The keynote speaker, Alex Wilson, focused his presentation on resilience. He spoke about ways existing buildings could be modified, or new buildings constructed, to better withstand the changing environment. This theme of resilience was then continued throughout the rest of conference. In many cases the theme emerged in the case studies of buildings that were abandoned, and in some cases on the verge of demolition, and how they were revitalized through preservation efforts.

The morning after the keynote my coworker, Nicole Ferran, and I presented a case study that closely followed the theme of the night before. Hoen, an industrial complex in Baltimore, Maryland has sat abandoned since the early 1980s. Our case study discussed the balance between preservation approaches and the importance of inhabitation. Work included both repair and localized reconstruction. The finished product preserves the rich history of the complex and will serve as a focal point of the revitalization of the East Baltimore neighborhood. Hoen has demonstrated resilient behavior- the complex had been over run and heavily damaged by nature, but the strength of the original construction persevered.

The paper sessions I attended were captivating; enriching and broadening my insight into preservation techniques and practices. The case studies presented in Track 1 “Decline vs. Revival: Tempering the Impulse to Tear Down and Start Over” drew my attention and continued with the overall theme of resilience. One session, “Innovated or Unusual Reuse” described deconstruction and monitored collapse as two different approaches to preservation. Both were intriguing new ideas I had never considered before. The same paper session introduced me to baltimorebrickbybrick.com, a website that catalogs the deconstruction processes of Baltimore, Maryland’s abandoned buildings.

In addition to paper sessions I attended the Preservation Engineering Technical Committee (PETC) Meeting. The PETC meeting offered me the opportunity to meet and connect with other professionals who share similar interests to my own from all over the world. The enthusiasm of this group of people encouraged me to become more involved and as a result I volunteered to help organize the 2019 Student Design Competition to be held at the Miami conference.

Buffalo thrived in the early 20th century as a key industrial American city and has an impressive architectural history as a result. With buildings and landscapes designed by some of America’s most well-known architects and designers, including H.H. Richardson (Figure 2), Louis Sullivan (Figure 3), Frank Lloyd Wright, Richard Upjohn (Figure 4) and Frederick Olmsted.

Figure 2: Originally a mental hospital, this heavy stone Richardson building was renovated recently into a boutique hotel.

Figure 3: Louis Sullivan's Guaranty Building in downtown Buffalo, NY.

Figure 4: Upjohn’s gothic revival style church in downtown Buffalo. The exterior is impressive but the interior is absolutely breathtaking!

Outside of scheduled conference activities, I had the opportunity to explore the city and experience these magnificent constructions. Within a few blocks of the conference hotel sat some of the most stunning early 20th century buildings. The beauty, history and culture of Buffalo surpassed all expectations and was an exceptional city to host the 50th APTI conference.

On March 19th, the Cosmos Club hosted APTDC and presentations on the preservation of the club were given by David Riccio of John Canning Preservation and Arthur Page of Page Conservation. For those who missed the presentations below are some notes from the evening!

John Canning:

-Cheap repairs in the mid-centurn allowed the existing plaster to deteriorate along the exterior wall

-Molds taken from other areas of the room were used to replace the damaged areas

-Where furring strips worked loose of the joists, blocking pieces were used to fill the space between the joists and furring strips with the plaster then reinstalled over the assemblage

-The original gilding was actually three different techniques including water gilding and roman gilding

-Paint analysis determined the original color of the room was a warm grey. Canning used two separate shades of gray to subtly enhance the ornamental plasterwork.

-To remove and restore the lunette panels above the doors, the door headers were carefully removed. When replaced, the screws (which were covered after re-installation) were carefully mapped to aid future repair work.

Arthur Page:

-The lunettes over the doors were overpainted by a decorator in the early 20th century

-To determine how much overpainting was performed the paintings are viewed under a specific lightsource where the overpainting comes off as dull and dark.

-When the lunette canvases were remounted a larger sheet of muslin was attached to the canvas with modified wax to make future removal from the stretcher easier

-Additionally a new stretcher system was used which will expand and contract less than the original wood stretcher

Thanks to the Cosmos Club, John Canning, and Arthur Page for a great event!

Kimberly Robinson, Museum Curator with the National Park Service, and Bryan Fisher, AIA, Historic Preservation Specialist at GWWO Architects guided two groups of APT DC and AIA DC members and guests through Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial, to provide an overview of preservation and rehabilitation efforts slated for construction beginning this spring and extending into next year. The project includes the restoration of the mansion house, dependencies, and grounds as well as the construction of a new structure to support the visitor experience.

Exterior walkways will be paved with a bonded aggregate material to better define walkways and to prevent dust and grit from current stone fines (pea gravel) walkways from being tracked into the mansion, where it damages floors and artifacts.

The National Park Service prepared a vast body of research before undertaking this project including historic structure reports, a cultural landscape report, an historic furnishing report, and a paint study. These documents were immensely helpful in guiding the restoration planning.

Some compromises needed to be struck between a fully authentic restoration of the site to its early-1860s appearance and its modern-day visitation of nearly 600,000 per year. Most notably, ramps will be added at both the front and rear of the mansion to allow one-way flow of visitors through the house museum.

Selected bricks across the basement foundation walls exhibited spalling and deterioration. It is likely these site-made historic bricks were not adequately fired when originally kiln baked. The deteriorated bricks will be selectively replaced with salvaged material and the remainder of the walls monitored for future spalling.

The house has never had much electric lighting installed and the intention is to keep electric lighting at a minimum, only installed as necessary to illuminate spaces with inadequate daylighting.

Future tours are being planned to show progress during and after the project. Thank you to Kimberley and Bryan for hosting this great event!

On February 24th APT DC took over Open Works in downtown Baltimore to learn about new and different digital fabrication techniques. The following are just a few takeaways from each of the wonderful speakers:

Audrey Tepper, a Historic Architect with the National Park Service at the National Mall and Memorial Parks, and Tim Vandewalle, Superintendent at the Christman Company, both discussed their current and ongoing preservation efforts at some of our Nation's significant monuments at the Octagon House to a sold-out audience. Both presenters discussed the innovative technologies developed to appropriately restore and repair historic materials at National Monuments that spawned an informative Q&A discussion afterwards.

Our major takeaways from the presentations are as follows:

1.Increasing annual visitation numbers to our National Monuments are putting stress on our current historic resources. Aging visitor spaces need to be upgraded and many monuments are in need of restoration.

2.The aggressive bio-film found on the Thomas Jefferson Memorial has a unique biology, even different from a similar bio-film found across the Potomac at Arlington Cemetery.

3.Laser-cleaning was determined to be the only long-lasting solution for keeping the aggressive bio-film from growing back.

4. There are 4 methods of repairing cracked cast-iron

1.Heat (1000-1500 degrees Fahrenheit and is only successful when employed at corners of cast-iron)

2.Mechanical

3.Chemical

4.In-kind Replacement

5.Lock-n-Stitch (a mechanical technique developed by Gary Reed) was chosen for the restoration of the Capitol Dome because it preserved the most material in-place among other significant reasons including limited heating processes to the already delicate historic cast iron.

6.Lock-n-Stitch developed a unique mechanical fastener for use on the Capitol Dome, which had a special profile to provide added strength to the low thread strength of in-place historic cast-iron.

7.Selective demolition and fit-up prior to commencement of cast-iron work is critical to the success of repairs.

8.Employ "magnetic particle inspection" after repairs have been completed to ensure no new cracks or discontinuities were formed.

9.Previous mid-century repairs to the Capitol Dome included heat-based repairs, which are irreversible and cannot be reworked or reheated.

Thanks to Kara Johnston for compiling these pointers and thank you to our presenters, we truly enjoyed learning about your experiences with our National Monuments!

Recently a small group of APT DC members were led on a tour of the exterior of the Sidney Yates building by representatives from Grunley Construction Company. The tour included discussions on the restoration techniques used at the windows and masonry units, and up-close viewing of these elements from the scaffolding at the south side and west sides of the building. A few key points from the project shared by Nick Patrick of Grunley include:

Sunday, November 26, 2017 10:33 AM |
Anonymous

Moira Nadal, one of this year's recipients of APT DC's Emerging Professionals Sponsorships, attended the 2017 APTI Conference in Ottawa, Ontario. The following is her summary of the workshop.

I was thrilled to receive the scholarship to attend the APT-National Trust of Canada joint conference in Ottawa. Since I work for the National Trust in the United States (NTHP) I was interested to see the types of programming put on by the National Trust of Canada and how it was joined with the technical presentations from APT. There seemed to be two main points of focus for the conference; indigenous heritage and sustainability.

In the opening remarks, it was acknowledged that we were gathered on un-ceded Waginaquan (Algonquin) Anishinabeg First Nation land. Tribal members gave prayers and blessings to open the conference proceedings. I was impressed by the time and space given for the First Nations representatives and the inclusion of the longer and deeper meanings of the spaces we were inhabiting. History didn’t start in that place when the lavish high-style building was constructed. There was then a provocative talk by John Ralston Saul, a Canadian award-winning philosopher, novelist and essayist, entitled People and Place: The Complex Linkage of Our Lives, Our Mythologies, and Our Physical Reality. Ralston Saul framed the 150th anniversary of Canadian Confederation as an opportunity for real debate and questioning. He highlighted the contrast between concepts of ownership and heritage versus profit. That people who consider that they own a place feel that they can do as they like with it. I think it was valuable to step back and hear this more macro-perspective. So often are we concerned with the details of scheduling projects, reviewing proposed work against the Secretary of the Interior Standards, material compatibility, and so forth. It was refreshing to take a moment to think about who and how and why we intervene with historic places and what those intersections with multiple layers of heritage and meaning might be. Who makes the decisions and who gets to do the work? As practitioners, I think we can begin to lose perspective on some of these larger theoretical questions.

The conference was organized along the following tracks: Documentation and Diagnostics – Understanding Historic Places; Design – Planning the Conservation of Historic Places; Delivery – Intervening in Historic Places; Policy and Practice; Canada 150 – Indigenous Heritage, Diversity, and New Directions; Integrating Old and New – Buildings, Districts, and Landscapes; and Regeneration – Community, Economics, and Equitable Places. I attended a variety of sessions, some technical and some cultural. As some of the presentations were in French, the other national language of Canada, we were provided with headphones connected to simultaneous interpreters. It was very cool and made me feel like I was at the UN.

Several session topics were helpful for potential reviews that I may have to conduct for my position with NTHP. I learned about base isolation for seismic retrofitting of historic buildings, which is immediately useful as I monitor properties in California and Oregon. There were also several presentations where I learned more about testing historic windows in situ to demonstrate their performance under specific conditions and with different modifications to make informed comparisons of retention versus replacement. After having the opportunity to walk around the historic district near the conference hotel, I also appreciated getting to know more about Parliament Hill and the ongoing work at that complex of buildings.

In addition to the presentation panels, there was a very full demonstration hall. It was so valuable to be able to ask questions of the vendors on site and helped me to understand some of the newer products and methodologies I’ve been hearing about. I especially enjoyed the hands-on demonstrations by students from the Heritage Institute of Algonquin College. We shared desserts from the reception while planing molding profiles. Overall, the conference was a great mix of detailed technical presentations, larger cultural and theoretical discussions, and networking with professionals from throughout North America and 20 represented nations.

Sunday, September 24, 2017 12:35 PM |
Anonymous

Naomi Doddington, one of this year's recipient of APTDC's Emerging Professional Sponsorship, attended IPTN's 2017 workshop in Detroit. The following is her summary of the workshop.

The Preservation Trades Network’s annual conference, the International Preservation Trades Workshop, was held in Detroit this year. I was honored to receive the 2017 APT DC Emerging Professional Scholarship Program scholarship to attend the conference this year. IPTW consists of 2 ½ days of hands-on workshops where participants are able to interact with experts in different preservation trades.

Our host location this year was the Belle Isle Boat House, a once-magnificent club house that still serves as home base for a local rowing team…and was the site of the Olympic swim trials where Johnny Weissmuller, who would go on to play Tarzan in the 30s and 40s, qualified for the games. Upkeep on this site has suffered with the decline of private-club membership and some well-intentioned, yet ultimately destructive, maintenance decisions in the early 2000’s. This includes the use of a strong Portland cement stucco to cover the exterior, exacerbating an existing moisture problem that has caused significant rust-jacking of structural steel within the brick walls.

As part of its conference, some IPTW presenters utilize their skills to provide free work on the host site while they teach attendees about their work. In this photo, presenter Blair Bates discusses the process of repairing the stucco on the exterior of the building. The stucco applied in the 2000’s, with a high concentration of Portland cement, has already started to fail in certain places. Blair had been on site for a few days and had removed the unsound stucco from above a window near the entrance. He explained how he was using type “K” mortar mix for the new stucco. This mix is 1 part white Portland cement, 3 parts lime and 10 parts mason’s sand. This is a very soft, low-compression mix useful in this type of application. Horsehair not being as readily available as it once was, Blair has been using nylon fibers in the mix in its place. There are two main things I learned from Blair’s presentation. When using a float to smooth the surface of the stucco, Blair recommends holding it in your non-dominant hand and pull the float towards your body. In this manner, you are less likely to put too much pressure on the stucco in any given place. The second is a fun bit of trivia that could be useful sometime. The different mortar mixes are assigned every other letter of the phrase, “MASON WORK”. Additionally, you can tell the proportion of cement to lime in the mix based on its position within the word. “M” mix is 3 parts cement to 1 part lime. “S” is 2 parts cement to 1 part lime. “N” is 1 to 1. “O” is 1 part cement to 2 parts lime. Finally, “K” is the 1:3 mix as described above.

You may know that producing shellac involves beetles, but did you know how? I had always assumed we were pulverizing the little bugs and mixing it with a solvent to create the shiny topcoat (you know, like red food dye). In fact, the bugs are not sacrificed at all! The lac beetle sucks the sap out of a tree, then excretes the digested results in tunnels on the exterior of the tree. This sap/poo is scraped off the trees, processed, dried, and crumbled up. When mixed with denatured alcohol (or moonshine), it creates the high-gloss finish we associate with shellac. The color of the shellac is actually dependent on the type of tree that the beetles were extracting sap from. Mary Webb, of the National Parks Service Western Archaeological and Conservation Center gave a great presentation on environmentally friendly(er) finishes for wood as well as the best pro-environment ways to remove old finishes. As you can imagine, my fellow preservationists, older techniques are generally less toxic than the 20th century paints and stains that we have to so often protect ourselves from when we work in our treasured buildings. Long live linseed oil!

There were several presentations on windows. Andrea Sevonty and her employees had dismantled the one stained glass window in the club and were re-making the piece. She greatly lamented that poor solder work (especially previous amateur repair efforts) had required re-making the window as the cames themselves had been in good shape. The crew had traced the window while still intact and was using this as a guide to the reassembly, with each piece of carefully labeled glass corresponding to a number on the cartoon. Andrea explained the easy test to tell if the cames (those are the metal pieces between each piece of glass) are lead or zinc. Using your fingernail, try to scratch the came. If you are successful, then you know the came is lead. If not, it is the harder zinc. You may think that with a design comprised of mainly clear glass, replacing broken pieces would be a breeze. Andrea actually explained it can be rather tricky as “clear” glass can skew pink, purple, or even yellow depending on the makeup of the glass! Kevin Doenir and his crew from the Window Preservation Alliance spent their time repairing a pair of round clerestory windows from the Boat House’s beautiful double-height main hall. I’ve done a fair bit of window work in my day, but I did learn a neat trick. This works well when working on a window you’ve removed from its opening. After glazing with a linseed oil based putty, sprinkle a little bit of whiting in the center of the glass pane. Using a dry brush, swirl the whiting all around the pane, working from the center out to the edges. This removes any last vestiges of oil from the center of the glass, resulting in sparkling window panes ready for paint and reinstallation!

Is Bob insane? This is real knob and tube lighting…and he has his finger in the socket (after licking it first no less)! Not according to Peter Janko. Although Peter explained that knob and tube is not inherently dangerous, it runs so counter to what we all understand of electricity. It does generate a fair bit of heat, which is meant to dissipate into the air around the wires (thus why it is held at a remove from the surface). Only when we insisted on insulating with cellulose did we create a problem. By surrounding the wire with cellulose, we forced the heat to dissipate into a highly flammable material. Even so, Peter has discovered a way to use existing knob and tube, or even install a new system, and still meet code. The secret lies in LED technology. If you come across a system that is still wired, you can disconnect any wire that runs to a plug (they do overheat badly and won’t pass code), connect the system to a low voltage source (four E batteries for the example where our volunteer stuck his wet finger in the socket…and you can see how bright the bulb next to it is lit) and special low-voltage LED bulbs. He has had success using this system in new construction by calling it “Decorative Low-Voltage LED Lighting”. You can even buy a 12v battery (often used as backup power for a computer) to run your system. Simply buy a battery maintainer (like for a snowmobile) to recharge your battery periodically and you’ll have a power-outage proof system.

Sharpening tools is vital to many trades. Rudy Christian presented his preferred method for sharpening tools. He began with a humble chisel. Starting with a water bath wet-stone grinder with a 250 grit wheel, Rudy laid the primary bevel (the big angle you picture when you think of a chisel) against the spinning wheel, allowing it to remove just a sliver of the metal. With a 250 grit waterstone (kept in his cooler full of water), Randy then manually smoothed the high spots left by the machine. He moved on to an 800 grit waterstone next, making sure that the primary bevel was flat against each stone on every pull. Then he did something I never knew to do. He pulled out a 3,000 grit diamond waterstone (it looks a bit like a waffle iron griddle) and laid the chisel’s primary bevel against the surface. Before pulling the chisel towards his body he lifted the chisel up just 5%. In this way, he put a micro-bevel on the very tip of his chisel. This micro-bevel helps to move the wood away from the main bevel, allowing for faster and neater work.

I’ve saved the best for last! I’ve done a fair bit of decorative finishing in my day. Wood graining, marbling, Venetian plaster, I was intrigued to learn there was a technique I had never even heard of. This is the Italian technique called Scagliola. Mixing gypsum plaster, powdered pigment, and water with glue (to slow the plaster setting), scagliola replicates the look of marble in a time-consuming, but less expensive, manner. You are also limited only by your imagination as to the color and color-combinations that you want to use. I actually attended two sessions on this technique. The first was a hands-on presentation where I got to work with other attendees to mix balls of this plaster, cutting and mixing them with others to create a gradation of colors from blue to teal. We cut these balls into smaller pieces, then laid them randomly on a greased form (we were making a bowl) then pushed and smoothed the colors together to form a consistent thickness over the mold. Using a putty knife, David Hayles, our fearless instructor, cut veins into the plaster. We filled these with a yellow-ochre batch of the same plaster mix then smoothed the veins closed. Finally, David cut another set of veins and we filled them with a deep brown plaster mix. With lots and lots and lots and lots of sanding, our bowl will look somewhat like the one in the photograph. The second scagliola session I attended was David showcasing how a similar technique is used to decorate a column. This involves raw silk thread, very liquid plaster, Pollock-inspired application, and a joie de vivre that is infectious.

Seeing the end-results of some of the presentations was a lot of fun as well. I got to see stone carvings that were amazingly intricate and plaster pieces that were massive! I also visited blacksmith Owen C Creteau, Jr. and encountered a few pieces he has forged that puzzled me. The first were some amazing puzzles he has forged out of nails and other small metal pieces. The second was larger piece he had arranged on a table with the candlesticks, fire pokers, and other more readily-identified pieces. I puzzled over it for a few minutes before finally breaking down and asking him. It turns out, this is a toaster. One puts pieces of bread in the middle, then uses the handle to place the whole apparatus on the hearth close to the fire. Once one side is toasted, the piece is lifted by the handle and turned so that the other side is close to the fire. Ingenious!

The International Preservation Trades Workshop was a great deal of fun and a source of inspiration to me as a preservationist. I was able to close my weekend by giving back. The National Trust happened to be holding a work day at nearby Fort Wayne. Like many formerly active military installations around the country, Fort Wayne has facilities that span more than a century of construction techniques and had been badly neglected before being turned over to the city as a park. Throughout the day Sunday, more than 300 volunteers scraped and painted wood porches, built protective coverings for vulnerable building fabric, and re-glazed (in place) dozens of windows on former officer’s quarters. I participated in the latter and, I hope, we bought these historic materials a few more years as further funds are raised to do more.

I do have one lament, over and over, I heard people complaining that young people don’t want to go into the trades, even as half the conference attendees where under the age of 40. At the same time, I overheard a conversation in which someone was scoffing at the idea of paying an intern or an apprentice. In a city like Detroit, where renewal and gentrification are going hand in hand, I would like to see our elder statespersons embrace the opportunity to pass their knowledge and skills to the new generation, which means acknowledging that the upper middle-class students who could take on an unpaid internship are unlikely to be interested in manual labor. Offering a stipend, even a small one, that allows a student with the interest but not the finances to spend a summer (or a few years) learning from a master craftsperson is a way to preserve the knowledge and to help mitigate the effects of gentrification. Extending a hand to the urban poor, those who have grown up with the devastation that generations of economic disinvestment have wrought in their cities, is a way we can use preservation to create social good.

Thursday, June 15, 2017 9:23 PM |
Anonymous

At the 2017 APT DC Symposium this May, over 90 preservation professionals from a variety of backgrounds gathered to hear from experts working to increase energy efficiency in historic structures. The day’s presentations covered energy codes, energy models, increasing the efficiency of historic materials, and regional case studies. The day opened with a presentation from Historic Environment Scotland, demonstrating that the desire for efficiency in our historic resources is global!

Our top ten takeaways from the Symposium are:

1. International standards like the IgCC set a minimum baseline for energy codes, but codes can vary widely by local jurisdiction. Using an integrated design process and working with local code officials will ensure you are following the right directives for your structure and locality.

2. Energy standards like LEED, ENERGY STAR, and others provide guidance in achieving a high level of energy efficiency for your structure.

3. Achieving energy savings with historic preservation projects is well within reach, even though improvements to the envelope often aren’t feasible. Using energy models will help you determine improvements that provide the biggest savings for the lowest impact.

4. There are many types of energy models available on the market. Using the right model at the right time will help you predict or assess energy savings before, during, and after a project.

5. Think carefully about which components in your building are most appropriate for upgrades or modifications:

6. Energy modeling can show the order-of-magnitude effect of different upgrades to a Modernist curtain wall-clad building’s systems to help owners decide in which upgrades they would like to invest in (mechanical, lighting, enclosure, etc.).

7. Mass masonry walls are prone to deterioration if insulated improperly. It’s important to use tools like hygrothermal analysis to determine the brick’s properties and select the right type of insulating material.

8. New technologies like interior window retrofits will allow for greater insulation of historic sites without compromising original glazing materials or character.

9. Before inserting new materials into an existing system, make sure to investigate how your building and its materials are designed to perform, and consider how modifying an existing system will affect the structure. Investigate the real cause of problems first - maintenance issues, leaks, improper flashing, failure of finishes, etc.

10. There are many reasons to pursue energy efficiency in a historic preservation project: cost savings, occupant comfort, material preservation, and of course, environmental impact. Local programs like Sustainable DC recognize that historic resources are often most at risk for the effects of climate change. We all have a part to play in ensuring the worst consequences don’t come to reality!

We’re so thankful to all our presenters for sharing their work with our audience! If you are interested in learning more, PDFs of their presentations have been made available on the APT DC Symposium web page. Thanks also to the sponsors who made the event possible: Encore Sustainable Design; The Weidt Group; Conservation Solutions, Inc; Quinn Evans Architects; EHT Traceries; Consigli Construction; and our host, the Fred W. Smith Library for the Study of George Washington at Mount Vernon.